Jason Rolleston: Unified Agent and AI Aim to Boost Midmarket Security Capabilities
Consolidating Symantec, Carbon Black and other legacy security technologies into a single-agent framework is essential for Broadcom’s internal development efficiency and for customer usability, said Jason Rolleston, Broadcom vice president and general manager, enterprise security group.
See Also: Securing AI by Design: Building Trustworthy AI at Scale
Developing and testing duplicate codebases across multiple agents created redundant engineering overhead. It burdened customers with multiple agents, which boosts complexity and risk, said Rolleston. The company has built a modular architecture where the base agent interacts with the operating system and modules can be dynamically downloaded and activated based on client needs (see: Unified Security: Why Broadcom Joined Symantec, Carbon Black).
“You can think of it almost as a blade and chassis,” Rolleston said. “We have a framework that interacts with the operating system, and then we can bring down whatever code we need for the various use cases. So really, it becomes a single framework that we manage, and then it allows customers the ease of deployment, of turning things on and off, and so forth.”
In this video interview with Information Security Media Group, Rolleston also discussed:
- Differences in staffing and security resources for SMBs compared to large enterprises;
- Why artificial intelligence is currently focused on increasing attack velocity, reducing detection windows;
- Why 2026 will see increased automation and efficiency for large and small enterprises.
Rolleston is responsible for Broadcom’s combined portfolio of Symantec and Carbon Black solutions for information, network, endpoint and application security. He joined the company through the VMware acquisition, where he was most recently Carbon Black’s vice president and general manager. Before this, he was chief product officer at Kenna Security, where he led the company through the purchase by Cisco.

